Treasures of the Queens of Nimrud

Among the most remarkable finds of recent times was the discovery of the relatively intact burials of the Assyrian Queens of Nimrud, the importance of
which was largely overshadowed by the Gulf war.

Iraqi excavations in 1988–1990 revealed the tombs of a number of Assyrian queens containing astonishing quantities of gold objects and jewellery
on a scale to match the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun. Following the 1st Gulf War in 1991 and the imposition of sanctions, further
archaeological work in Iraq, at least for foreign missions, became impossible

As entire series of underground vaults were discovered as well as wells containing many bodies some with grave goods, as much as up to 400 in one well
alone all held in iron shakles, this were considerations of this report
New Light on Nimrud

Excavations and restorations continued in the rest of the palace and in 1988, while clearing the debris and tidying the brick paving of Room MM,
workers stumbled on the first of the queens’tombs . This remarkable find inspired the excavators to continue digging in parts of the Harem, which
had not been excavated. They were rewarded in the next two seasons with two more tombs, where about 1000 gold objects were found. In 1991 a fourth
tomb was discovered in which glazed pots and bronze and silver vessels were found

The Royal burials were similar to the vault burials of the Sumerians including the bath tub shaped sarcophagus cut into the floor.

The 1992 season continued with the excavation of a courtyard and the rooms around it. beneath Rooms74 and 75, an unusual structure was discovered,
a narrow vaulted passage leading to three small vaulted rooms. Many remarkable finds were discovered here including cylinder seals, numerous beads,
glazed pottery, and an inscribed stone tablet of Shalmaneser III

Muzahim Mahmud noticed some anomalies in the floor, which led him to dig below it. He found the corbelled vault of a brick-built chamber measuring
2.5 ×1.85 × 2 m, with some bricks naming Ashurnasirpal II (883–859 BC), possibly in a secondary context, and a sarcophagus let into the floor

The Assyrians appeared to have been avid collectors of carved ivory from places such as Phonecia and Egypt, large numbers of which were found, this
also influenced their own work in ivory.

Inside the sarcophagus there were the blackened remains of linen garments and between the layers of these were the skeletons of two women of
different heights. The many inscribed objects enabled one of the bodies to be identified as Yaba’; the other was Banêti, wife of Shalmaneser V
(726–722 BC) or Ataliya, wife of Sargon II (721–705 BC).

Perhaps much of their collection had arrived in the form of tribute, their seeming patronage of the arts somewhat at variance with the fierce identity
they liked to project to the public.

The inscribed objects from the queens’ tombs are written in pictographic, cuneiform and alphabetic scripts. They express thoughts in many
languages, such as Sumerian,Akkadian, Hittite, Kassite, Phoenician, Aramaic and South Arabian. They are written upon gold, silver, bronze,stones,
ivory, bricks, clay and probably other materials that have since perished

All of the Royal burials had protective curses, this does not seem to have troubled the Iraqi archaeologists but perhaps it should have...

By the name of Shamash, Ereshkigal and the Anunnaki, the great gods of the earth, mortal destiny overtook Yabâ,the queen, in death, she went to
the path of her ancestors.

Whoever, in the future, be it a queen who sits on the throne or a palace lady who is a concubine of the king moves me from my tomb, or puts anybody
else with me, and lays his hand upon my jewellery with evil intent or breaks open the seal of that tomb, above earth,under the rays of the sun, let
his spirit roam outside in thirst, below in the underworld, when libations of water are offered, he must not receive with the Anunnaki as a funerary
offering any beer, wine or meal.

May Ningishzida and the great door-keeper, Bitu, the great gods of the underworld, afflict his corpse and ghost with
eternal restlessness.

The craft work is of the very highest quality, they were pioneers in many materials such as glass and ceramic glazing, though also of course drawing
upon the rich legacy of Mesopotamia.

Belonging to Mullissu-mukannishat-Ninua, queen of Ashurnasirpal, king of Assyria mother of Shalmaneser, king of Assyria, No one later may place
herein anyone else, be it a palace lady a queen, nor remove this sarcophagus from its place.

Anybody who removes this sarcophagus from its place, his spirit will not receive funerary offerings with other spirits: it
is a taboo of Shamash and Ereshkigal

Bitu was an identification of the door keeper into the underworld, the word literally meant 'enter!'

Daughter of Ashur-nêrka-da’’inni, chief cup-bearer of Ashurnasirpal, king of Assyria. Anyone after who removes my throne from before the
shades of the dead,may his spirit receive no bread!

May some one later clothe me with a shroud, anoint me with oil and sacrifice a lamb

The curses generally are directed towards the individuals after they themselves die, that they will not be allowed into the afterlife but ever remain
restless spirits.

Belonging to Mullissu-mukannishat-Ninua, queen of Ashurnasirpal, king of Assyria, of Shalmaneser, king of Assyria.

No one later may place herein anyone else, whether a palace lady or a queen, nor remove this sarcophagus from its place;
whoever removes this sarcophagus from its place, his spirit will not receive funerary offerings with other spirits: it is a taboo of Shamash and
Ereshkigal—daughter of Ashur-nêrkada’’inni,chief cup-bearer of Ashurnasirpal, king of Assyria.

Some of the artifacts recovered were quite mysterious and not found elsewhere, such as a carved black stone cup with tubular attachment which i can
only find a drawn schematic of, there are those hinting at alien or more properly
Giselian artifacts discovered at
Nimrud.

On that note there is also a very curious relief carving of the Assyrian King relaxing in his garden at Nineveh amongst his harem upon a very curious
assemblage and in the manner of a fish...

Yes it's from the Madonna and Saint Anne with Holy infants cartoon, but anyway also yes the Nimrud excavations found an enormous amount of remarkable
material in those vaults which isn't well enough known .

I think even the first gulf war prevented a proper evaluation of everything recovered, there were hundreds of bodies and thousands of artifacts, and
no doubt things have gone missing since though not the major pieces which were safely stored during the 2nd gulf war, Islamic state would be the end
of it all but not happened yet

I told you more then 2 years ago you really should look into what is below the clam shell monument called the tomb of the unknown soldier Baghdad Iraq
in what was once in the green zone, then the IZ, now in the vacinity of the biggest American embassay compound. Some will say that below was an old
republican guard bunker which is true, below that is some really crazy sh1t you will find alot of similar imagery from the op along with trapped walls
and all kinds of things. I implore you to look into that site. As always you write some awesome threads Kantz.

In this vid they are barely down the first stair case farther down you will find large swords mounted around a pillar moving down to mud boxes filled
with bones. I think you should look into it =D I wish I had pix but my job in the service kind of made that illegal, I have some neat pix of ziggurats
I have never seen or read about online as well those were taken from the air. The underground stuff was a lot more restricted.

I can try but it always seems to me that either you have access to the actual artifacts and information or you don't, and if not there's little
point looking around the internet in general or following up on generally hoax claims of no substance.

It was the FL article that caused me to have a considered look at Nimrud and find a paper on what was uncovered, it's impressive but i don't see any
artifact indicating 'Giselian', i also couldn't find any mention of 'Giselian kedeths' in the recovered inscriptions, as usual it would probably
be better if people put up or shut up...but still it was well worth looking into the report.

The locations of the other Giselian kedeths referred to in the recovered inscriptions remain unknown.

Of key importance is that the throne room suite, unlike that in the earlier sites so far excavated, includes too adjoining ablution and also the
strange object labeled KYR-377.

Yes it's from the Madonna and Saint Anne with Holy infants cartoon, but anyway also yes the Nimrud excavations found an enormous amount of remarkable
material in those vaults which isn't well enough known .

that image has been mirrored with a graphics program. whats the original look like?
the winged creature is sporting an egyptian uraeus.

Yes it's from the Madonna and Saint Anne with Holy infants cartoon, but anyway also yes the Nimrud excavations found an enormous amount of remarkable
material in those vaults which isn't well enough known .

Wow just look at the Egyptian influence here or visa versa.

The rings above are just fantastic. Made as good as they could be today. Some of this other gold and art work looks sloppy when compared to the high
skill involved with the rings even though its clearly much harder to work at that level.

Yes i like their very fine inlaid stone work such as on this bracelet, even though some of the stones have fallen out, you can even see one of the
central worshipers had red hair and beard, which is interesting.

And i like their little dog figurines, dog inscribed with the name "Loud is his bark!" (dan rigiššu) in cuneiform script, which were found down a
well.

I'm not sure really until i can source a photo of the actual object, there was also this multiple cups on stems so possibly also some sort of tubular
arrangement.

[/quote ]
Thanks for the explanation, yes I can make sense out of it now,about the Kush bearing tribute,I think it maybe more of a trade item,tribute imply
power play relationship,and as far as I know Kush never came under the political sway of Phoenicia,matter of fact it was the other way around,but
during the cold war between Kush and Assyria Kush trading agents traded horses with their cold war enemies much as the USA traded with the former
USSR along with spies and political intrigue use their satellite states in proxy wars before finally they went from cold to hot.

The Laventines were certainly Egyptophiles they and their brake away state the Carthaginians loved themselves some Isis and Bes the the above were
found in both Carthage and Ibiza. www.beazley.ox.ac.uk...
Fine source for things Punic and Laventine

Iraqi excavations in 1988–1990 revealed the tombs of a number of Assyrian queens containing astonishing quantities of gold objects and jewellery
on a scale to match the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun. Following the 1st Gulf War in 1991 and the imposition of sanctions, further
archaeological work in Iraq, at least for foreign missions, became impossible

What a shame, the untold antiquities and history that has been lost not only in Iraq, but across the entire Middle East thanks to man's inability to
reach peace and prevent fanaticism. I still have the vivid memory of watching news footage from pre-9/11 of the animals running Afghanistan blowing
up the giant carved Buddhas. Throw in all the destruction around the Holy Land's historic sites, the shelling in Iraq and the surrounding area, and
the centuries of grave robbing and tomb raiding throughout the region and the amount of history lost is heartbreaking.

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